I knew these sensitive people needed extra time and love. But those Thanksgiving toasts created a space where the staff could be vulnerable with their peers, and they needed that, too. If you donât create room for the people who work for you to feel seen and heard in a team setting, theyâll never be fully known by the people around them.
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The answer is simple, if not easy: create a culture of hospitality. Which means addressing questions Iâve spent my career asking: How do you make the people who work for you and the people you serve feel seen and valued? How do you give them a sense of belonging? How do you make them feel part of something bigger than themselves? How do you make them feel welcome?
Invite Your Team Along
Thereâs a fascinating and possibly overlooked advantage that businesses with strong cultures have: when an employee comes up in the organization, any other way of doing things just feels wrong.
And wrong is how EMP felt when I walked in on my first day.
In retrospect, I can now name everything that was going sideways and tell you what I did by way of correction. In the heroic version of this story, I struck a masterful pose and enumerated a number of inspirational management tenets, all of which transformed the restaurant within the week.
But the truth is, Dannyâs way of doing thingsâthe way he treated his employees and guestsâwas so baked into my consciousness that for the first few months I was acting on instinct alone.
Mostly, the team needed to be brought along. They needed to feel seen and appreciated. They needed expectations to be clearly laid out and explained. They needed discipline to be consistent. They needed to feel like vital and important parts of an exciting sea change, not obstacles to making it happen.
From a management perspective, we needed to return to first principles, and at Union Square Hospitality Group, the first principle is to take care of one another. The fine-dining squad hadnât come from within USHGâand even if they had been able to absorb this crucial, employee-centered aspect of the culture, theyâd been so focused on making their mark on the restaurant that theyâd let this central principle fall by the wayside. Thatâs why Danny had insisted the next GM come from within the company; for him, that aspect of the culture was not negotiable.
To bridge the gap between the two factions, improving communication was going to be key. At the same time, we needed systems, so everybody would know what they were supposed to be doing and how they were supposed to be doing it.
It was my hope that both fixes would make the team feel saferâand inspire them to come along on our mission. There was a lot to be done to make the restaurant better, but there would be no point to doing any of it if the people who worked there didnât love coming to work. If I couldnât succeed in getting hearts and minds on board for the bigger project, then the grand vision of a push toward excellence would be dead on arrival.
It didnât even matter who was right and wrong, though, because nobody was communicating effectively. The front-line staff werenât talking to one another because nobody was talking to them, and they werenât listening to one another because they felt like nobody was listening to them. So I spent my first few weeks sitting down with every single member of the team and hearing them out. That was a whole education in itself; I learned a lot of information about the restaurant it would otherwise have taken me a long time to figure out. Those meetings also taught me that time spent goes a long way. Sitting down with people shows them you care about what they think and how they feel and makes it that much easier for them to trust that you have their best interests in mind. For this reason, Iâd later ask the managers to stop sitting together during family meal, which the staff shares together before the restaurant is open. By spreading out, theyâd learn, as I had, that the meal is a perfect opportunity to gather ideas and perspectives that might otherwise slip through the cracks.
Itâs a clichĂ© that culture canât be taught; it has to be caught. And what better way to appreciate the exquisite nature of Danielâs food than to spend six months ferrying plates from the kitchen to the table? More important, while we were teaching people the technical points a little bit at a time, it would give them the opportunity to fully absorb the culture we were building, long before they became point person with a guest. And how we chose which people to invite onto the team became central to our success.
People who are gifted at hospitality tend to be sensitive. They notice everything, feel deeply, and care a lot. These are superpowers, though that tenderness can also make them a handful to manage. Iâve heard many frustrated managers complain about these employees: âTheyâre so needy! They need so much reinforcement! I have to walk them through every decision; I have to hold their hands through every change!â But these tendencies are often what make these people so good at their work; they need to have delicate antennae. It takes compassion to know when a guest is intimidated by the roomâand a light touch to dial back the formality so they donât feel condescended to.